# The Battle of Blair Mountain Page: https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/the-battle-of-blair-mountain Text version: https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/the-battle-of-blair-mountain.md Podcast: [Disturbing History](https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005) Published: 2026-04-10T16:45:03+00:00 Episode link: https://www.spreaker.com/episode/the-battle-of-blair-mountain--71236068 Audio file: https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/api.spreaker.com/download/episode/71236068/dhblairfinal.mp3 Processing state: not_requested JSON: https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/disturbing-history-7341005/episodes/the-battle-of-blair-mountain Duration seconds: 4469 ## Resource The Battle of Blair Mountain stands as the largest armed insurrection on American soil since the Civil War, yet for nearly a century it was virtually absent from the nation's textbooks and public memory. In the late summer of nineteen twenty-one, roughly ten thousand coal miners in southern West Virginia, many of them World War One veterans, picked up rifles, tied red bandanas around their necks, and marched through the Appalachian mountains to fight for the right to join a union. They were met at Blair Mountain by roughly three thousand deputies, mine guards, and armed civilians funded by the coal industry, entrenched in machine gun nests and fortified positions along a ten-mile ridgeline. For five days the two sides fought a pitched battle that saw roughly a million rounds fired and private biplanes dropping homemade pipe bombs on American citizens. The fighting ended only when President Warren G. Harding deployed federal troops and Army bomber squadrons to the region. This episode traces the full arc of the West Virginia mine wars, from the brutal company town system and the scrip economy that trapped miners in perpetual debt, through the Paint Creek-Cabin Creek strike of nineteen twelve and the armored Bull Moose Special that machine-gunned sleeping families, to the Matewan Massacre of nineteen twenty and the brazen assassination of police chief Sid Hatfield on the McDowell County courthouse steps. It examines the key figures on both sides, including Mother Jones, Frank Keeney, Bill Blizzard, Sheriff Don Chafin, and the Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency, and it explores the remarkable cross-racial solidarity among Black, white, and immigrant miners who fought together in an era defined by segregation. The episode also follows the century-long struggle to preserve Blai… ## Actions - request_transcript: `POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/disturbing-history-7341005/episodes/the-battle-of-blair-mountain/transcription-requests` — Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode. - read_markdown: `GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/the-battle-of-blair-mountain.md` — Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource. A page view does not enqueue transcription. Agents should invoke `request_transcript` explicitly when they need this episode processed. ## Transcript Full transcripts are not published on public pages unless there is a clear rights basis.